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Feb 28, 2003 · In the first decade of the 20 th century, Husserl considerably refined and modified his method into what he called “transcendental phenomenology”. This method has us focus on the essential structures that allow the objects naively taken for granted in the “natural attitude” (which is characteristic of both our everyday life and ordinary ...
Jul 11, 2017 · This article examines the relevance of Husserl’s writings and their introduction of the “phenomenological reduction” as the distinguishing characteristic of his transcendental form of...
- Biagio G. Tassone
- Tassone@lasalle.edu
- 2017
phenomenology – a work that would eventually take philosophy beyond the older, tired alternatives of psychologism and formalism, realism and idealism, objectivism and subjectivism.1 In this paper, I shall attempt to critically expose Husserl’s transcendental phenomenology and explore some implications to real-life situations. Phenomenology
Edmund Husserl (1859–1938) is regarded as the founder of transcendental phenomenology, one of the major traditions to emerge in twentieth-century philosophy.
- Andrea Sebastiano Staiti
- 2014
Oct 5, 2018 · Edmund Husserl described phenomenology as a science of transcendental phenomena. However, the rigour of phenomenology is interpreted philosophically. Knowledge derived from phenomenology is based on absolutely certain insights and the assumptions that ground human understanding are clarified.
- Sye Foong Yee
- yeesyefoong@yahoo.com
- 2019
Arguing that transcendental consciousness sets the limits of all possible knowledge, Husserl redefined phenomenology as a transcendental-idealist philosophy. Husserl's thought profoundly influenced 20th-century philosophy, and he remains a notable figure in contemporary philosophy and beyond.
The problems of oneness and unity occupied Husserl throughout all the phases of his philosophical development: his earliest work on number and logic, his pre-war realist descriptive phenomenology, and his idealist transcendental phenomenology.